(Newser)
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Scientists' prediction of increasing shark attacks appears to be coming true: There were 98 shark attacks worldwide in 2015—the highest number recorded in the International Shark Attack File's 57-year history, reports Time. The next highest total, 2000's 88 attacks, falls well behind the new record, which doesn't count incidents in which a shark was provoked, say, by a grabby scuba diver. The total is also a leap from 72 attacks in 2014, per National Geographic. A whopping 59 occurred in the US last year—another new record—up from 53 in 2014. Florida counted 30, North and South Carolina each had eight, and Hawaii saw seven. Outside of the US, Australia counted 18 attacks, while South Africa counted eight, reports USA Today.

Starting to panic? There's no need. Just six people were killed by sharks in 2015—a number that experts say has remained constant over the past decade. In comparison, 100 million sharks are killed by humans each year. "We can and should expect the number of attacks to be higher each year," but "the chances for any individual who goes in the water surviving have probably never been higher," researcher George Burgess says. While more people in the water is partly to blame for the high number of attacks, Burgess says the increase is also tied to better reporting and 2015 being the hottest year on record. We're now seeing sharks venture into warming waters where they aren't expected, Burgess says, which might explain a single attack in New York last year. (Selfies are actually deadlier than sharks.)

30 years ago Hong Kong had 30 shark deaths in one summer. Then they netted over 30 beaches and I don't think there's been a death since. Check out this beach in Hong Kong China! http://e020843b2959ca259a7a-e3c4eb1d4dd50b2a3d32d3f2b3986eda.r78.cf1.rackcdn.com/3/5/large.jpg

Fatquah

Feb 10, 2016 3:09 PM CST

It was not the hottest year on record. Selective data dragged out to fit the narrative.

Gart

Feb 10, 2016 10:16 AM CST

We have also killed most of their food supply as the oceans are pretty much dead at this point.